回复 6# chenly75
呵呵,我刚想回复,老大就上了
国外有个家伙叫Shabbir Malik,热衷收藏火柴盒玩具,他在自己的网站上展示了自己收藏心得,其中就有关于code system的解释
(Some parts of the coding system arereproduced with permission from Charlie Mack's book Universal's Matchbox Toys-- The Universal years, 1982 - 1992)
In the 1970's, a code system was developedby Ray Bush of U.K. Matchbox. This code has been adopted and is in wide usetoday to denote models manufactured, approved or not produced by Matchbox Toys.The code system is as follows:
CODE ONE: Any model wholly produced by Matchbox Toys.The model can be partially manufactured in one factory and altered later in aMatchbox owned or leased facility. CODE TWO: Any model altered in part or in whole byre-labeling, repainting or both by a second party not associated with Matchboxbut with Matchbox's full approval. This includes models manufactured as blanksin a Matchbox owned or leased facility and then tampoed or repainted by asecond party with either specific or blanket approval. CODE THREE: Any model repainted, re-labeled or alteredin any manner without Matchbox's consent. CODE FOUR: Any model that has labels, tide to anevent, applied by a company and the models are then given to their employeesand customers for promotional purposes. CODE FIVE: Any model that has Matchbox supplied labelsapplied to a model. The labels are almost like a water slide tide. There arenot very many examples around but they are very attractive. CODE SIX: Any model with personal type home madelabels applied to a model. CODE SEVEN: These are models with promotional/personallabels but no one knows how and how did it. These are called "PrivateIssues."
因此,除了CODE ONE和CODE TWO外,其他都不被官当认可
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